Illinois woman having surgery to remove needle in spine today

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Illinois woman having surgery to remove needle in spine today ST. LOUIS - A woman from southern Illinois is having a high risk surgery in St. Louis Monday to remove an epidural needle in her spine.Amy Garrison has been in constant pain since a medic broke half of the needle in her and never told her about it. It happened at a naval hospital in Jacksonville, Florida. She sued, but a judge dismissed the case. St. Louis County locals still without power after weekend storms 14 years later, tests found the problem. She's scheduled for surgery Monday at Barnes-Jewish Hospital. The surgery is risky and could paralyze her.  Garrison says she's scared, but she needs to know what it feels like to be without pain. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.   

St. Louis drivers among the worst in the US: study

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

St. Louis drivers among the worst in the US: study NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) - Feel like you share the roadways with some dangerous drivers? A new study shows where that's most likely to be the case. The study by ConsumerAffairs reviewed crash data from the U.S. Department of Transportation and information included in the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration's Fatality Analysis Reporting System. The site then ranked cities based on four factors: crash fatalities per 100,000 people, the number of fatalities (per 100,000 people) due to bad driving, positive blood alcohol content, and speeding. "Bad driving" included driving the wrong way in one-way traffic; failing to yield; aggressive and careless driving; making an improper turn; following improperly; inexperience operating; passing where prohibited; and improper or erratic lane changing. Only cities with populations of 100,000 or more were reviewed by ConsumerAffairs. Stuck at a red light? You may need to let it know you’re there Cities with the worst drivers, acc...

This no-fail Colorado perennial is close to my heart | Opinion

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

This no-fail Colorado perennial is close to my heart | Opinion Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems).Gardening in Colorado isn’t for the weak-hearted.It’s taken me decades of battling clay soil, grubs, slugs, beetles, weeds, drought and my own ignorance to arrive at a comfortable truce with my yard. No more do I throw my hands up in disgust every time I walk outdoors.But it’s been a difficult — and costly — road.In the spring, I would say prayers over my victims when I purchased hundreds of dollars worth of perennials and annuals, many of them destined to die in short order. An East Coast transplant, I once had high hopes for those acid-loving rhododendrons and Cape Cod-blue hydrangeas. I had silly visions of South Florida azaleas and bougainvillea thriving at 5,000 feet (RIP, lovely plants). Thousands spent...

Video art remains hard to define and a challenge to exhibit

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Video art remains hard to define and a challenge to exhibit No genre of art is more misunderstood, or less appreciated, by the general public than video art — for a couple of reasons.Even though it has been recognized and discussed for more than half a century — and has produced genuine art superstars ranging from pioneer Nam June Paik to current practitioners like Matthew Barney, Bill Viola and Tania Candiani — video art remains hard to define and a challenge to exhibit.The video piece “Never Settle” is part documentary, part satire. Photo provided by RedLine Art Center.It is easier to say what it is not: cinema, or at least traditional filmmaking where creators use actors to tell cohesive stories (although some video art has a narrative and a lot of it uses actors).But video art, speaking generally, tends to focus on presenting an idea or a concept, rather than a coherent tale. Most of the video art you see in galleries these days unfolds as a series of moving images, connected in a dream-like or surreal way that is meant...

Short book reviews: A timely tale in “The Deluge,” by Stephen Markley

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Short book reviews: A timely tale in “The Deluge,” by Stephen Markley Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the rest of us choose to pile onto our bedside tables. Sure, you could read advertising blurbs on Amazon, but wouldn’t you be more likely to believe a neighbor with no skin in the game over a corporation being fed words by publishers? So in this new series, we are sharing these mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer? Email [email protected].“The Deluge,” by Stephen Markley (Simon & Schuster)This novel in turn frustrated me, held me spellbound, scared the bejeezus out of me and left me in awe. “The Deluge” is set in the very near future and the U.S. is embroiled in the effects of successive and worsening climate-change-caused weather disasters, political extremism, home-grown terrorism, private militias, more senseless mass shootings, government surveillance and overreach, economic swings and anything else you can imagine ...

Tossing an old license plate in the trash landed this Colorado lawyer in jail for a theft he didn’t commit

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Tossing an old license plate in the trash landed this Colorado lawyer in jail for a theft he didn’t commit Manuel Diego Soza had no idea the trouble ahead when he tossed his old Texas license plate in the trash at an AutoZone store earlier this year.Months after throwing away the old plate and putting his new Colorado plates on his silver Subaru Forester, police officers showed up to Soza’s Denver apartment and took him to jail on theft charges.Their investigation hinged on the expired Texas license plate. A Hispanic man had walked out of a Walmart store with a stolen $199 speaker and climbed into a vehicle bearing that license plate. A Westminster police detective said Soza, who is also Hispanic, was “clearly” the thief.But the thief had a neck tattoo; Soza does not. And the thief’s vehicle was a different model and color than Soza’s Subaru.Westminster police botched the investigation and missed several red flags that should have alerted authorities that they were looking at the wrong suspect, Soza said. The criminal case against him was officially dropped ...

CAAMP’s Matt Vinson talks about why Denver streams the band more than any other city

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

CAAMP’s Matt Vinson talks about why Denver streams the band more than any other city CAAMP ended its two-night run at Red Rocks last October by passing out bunches of lavender to an amphitheater full of fans to celebrate the release of the band’s fourth LP, “Lavender Days.”A little over a year later, Ohio-born CAAMP is back in Denver for another sold-out, two-night Red Rocks run. But Denver isn’t just another city for the mountain-friendly folk-rock four-piece: according to Spotify, Denverites stream CAAMP more than any other city, and bassist Matt Vinson says the endlessly attentive and enthusiastic crowds here prove it.“Colorado was our first sold-out show outside of Ohio,” Vinson said. “[The fans] are there to have a good time, but also … pay attention and absorb the music.”That desire to pay attention blends well with the band’s yearning to highlight different aspects of its varied discography, which spans from slow, soulful acoustic to more upbeat, Lumineers-esque folk-rock. The first night at Red Rocks will be an acoustic set, a chance to spotlight...

Coloradans struggle with long waits for medical care as pandemic catch-up continues

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Coloradans struggle with long waits for medical care as pandemic catch-up continues When Meredith O’Harris broke out into painful hives, her doctors agreed she should see a dermatologist quickly, and she expected to get an appointment within days.Instead, O’Harris, of Arvada, was told it would be a year before she could see a doctor specializing in skin conditions — though if she were willing to meet with a physician assistant, the dermatology office could fit her in within a week.“The nature of the issue is that it’s emergent. I could wait about a day,” she said.Her doctor was concerned not only that the hives were painful, but that they could be a sign of lupus, a condition where the body attacks its own tissues, O’Harris said. Untreated lupus can cause damage to the kidneys, heart and other organs, meaning a quick diagnosis is important.By the time she saw the physician assistant in the dermatology office, she’d gotten some relief from a steroid injection her primary care doctor had given her, and while blood tests ruled...

Ten years in, the emerald ash borer breaches the Western Slope as it continues its steady — but slow — spread in Colorado

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

Ten years in, the emerald ash borer breaches the Western Slope as it continues its steady — but slow — spread in Colorado CARBONDALE — Carl Meinecke sidles up to an ash tree and wraps a tape measure around the trunk, gathering both circumference and diameter in one move.“Diameter is 17.9 inches,” Carbondale’s town arborist tells colleague and public landscape technician, Allison Uri. While Uri logs the number into her phone, Meinecke stands back, looks up and inspects the tree’s crown. No obvious signs of damage — no thinning, no dead spots, no noticeably small leaves.But all is not well in Carbondale.While this particular green ash on Crystal Bridge Drive may appear healthy, the emerald ash borer — an invasive wood-boring beetle native to East Asia that has decimated tens of millions of ash trees across 36 states over the last two decades — has come to this Roaring Fork Valley town of 6,500 situated between Glenwood Springs and Aspen. The discovery, confirmed this month by state officials, is the first sign that the borer has migrated to Colorado’s...

1 dead in apparent music studio shooting in downtown Los Angeles

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:42:42 GMT

1 dead in apparent music studio shooting in downtown Los Angeles Police are searching for a gunman who shot and killed a person in downtown Los Angeles Monday morning.This shooting occurred shortly after midnight in the 900 block of South San Pedro Street. The location of the incident appeared to be that of a recording studio but police have not confirmed that information. Police respond to a deadly shooting in downtown Los Angeles on July 17, 2023. (ANG)Officers arrived at the scene to find an unconscious man with multiple gunshot wounds. He was transported to a local hospital in an unknown condition. Gardener loses hand after discarded firework explodes in Torrance Police later said that one person had died from the shooting.Video showed several people were detained at the scene but no arrests have been made, the Los Angeles Police Department said. No suspect description or motive for the shooting was provided.